diff --git a/bash/.bash/iterm2_integration.bash b/bash/.bash/iterm2_integration.bash new file mode 100644 index 0000000..202514a --- /dev/null +++ b/bash/.bash/iterm2_integration.bash @@ -0,0 +1,637 @@ +#!/bin/bash +# The iTerm2 customizations fall under the following license: +# +# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or +# modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License +# as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 +# of the License, or (at your option) any later version. +# +# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, +# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of +# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the +# GNU General Public License for more details. +# +# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License +# along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software +# Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. + + +# -- BEGIN ITERM2 CUSTOMIZATIONS -- +if [[ "$ITERM_ENABLE_SHELL_INTEGRATION_WITH_TMUX""$TERM" != screen && "$ITERM_SHELL_INTEGRATION_INSTALLED" = "" && "$-" == *i* && "$TERM" != linux && "$TERM" != dumb ]]; then + +if shopt extdebug | grep on > /dev/null; then + echo "iTerm2 Shell Integration not installed." + echo "" + echo "Your shell has 'extdebug' turned on." + echo "This is incompatible with shell integration." + echo "Find 'shopt -s extdebug' in bash's rc scripts and remove it." + return 0 +fi + +ITERM_SHELL_INTEGRATION_INSTALLED=Yes +# Saved copy of your PS1. This is used to detect if the user changes PS1 +# directly. ITERM_PREV_PS1 will hold the last value that this script set PS1 to +# (including various custom escape sequences). +ITERM_PREV_PS1="$PS1" + +# A note on execution. When you invoke a command at an interactive prompt the following steps are taken: +# +# 1. The DEBUG trap runs. +# It calls __bp_preexec_invoke_exec +# It runs any registered preexec_functions, including __iterm2_preexec +# 2. The command you executed runs. +# 3. PROMPT_COMMAND runs. +# It runs __bp_precmd_invoke_cmd, which is inserted as the first command in PROMPT_COMMAND. +# It calls any registered precmd_functions +# Then, pre-existing PROMPT_COMMANDs run +# 4. The prompt is shown. +# +# __iterm2_prompt_command used to be run from precmd_functions but then a pre-existing +# PROMPT_COMMAND could clobber the PS1 it modifies. Instead, add __iterm2_prompt_command as the last +# of the "preexisting" PROMPT_COMMANDs so it will be the very last thing done before the prompt is +# shown (unless someone amends PROMPT_COMMAND, but that is on them). +if [[ -n "$PROMPT_COMMAND" ]]; then + PROMPT_COMMAND+=$'\n' +fi; +PROMPT_COMMAND+='__iterm2_prompt_command' + +# The following chunk of code, bash-preexec.sh, is licensed like this: +# The MIT License +# +# Copyright (c) 2015 Ryan Caloras and contributors (see https://github.com/rcaloras/bash-preexec) +# +# Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy +# of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal +# in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights +# to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell +# copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is +# furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: +# +# The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in +# all copies or substantial portions of the Software. +# +# THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR +# IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, +# FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE +# AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER +# LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, +# OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN +# THE SOFTWARE. + +# Wrap bash-preexec.sh in a function so that, if it exits early due to having +# been sourced elsewhere, it doesn't exit our entire script. +_install_bash_preexec () { +# -- END ITERM2 CUSTOMIZATIONS -- + +# -- BEGIN BASH-PREEXEC.SH -- +# bash-preexec.sh -- Bash support for ZSH-like 'preexec' and 'precmd' functions. +# https://github.com/rcaloras/bash-preexec +# +# +# 'preexec' functions are executed before each interactive command is +# executed, with the interactive command as its argument. The 'precmd' +# function is executed before each prompt is displayed. +# +# Author: Ryan Caloras (ryan@bashhub.com) +# Forked from Original Author: Glyph Lefkowitz +# +# V0.4.0 +# + +# General Usage: +# +# 1. Source this file at the end of your bash profile so as not to interfere +# with anything else that's using PROMPT_COMMAND. +# +# 2. Add any precmd or preexec functions by appending them to their arrays: +# e.g. +# precmd_functions+=(my_precmd_function) +# precmd_functions+=(some_other_precmd_function) +# +# preexec_functions+=(my_preexec_function) +# +# 3. Consider changing anything using the DEBUG trap or PROMPT_COMMAND +# to use preexec and precmd instead. Preexisting usages will be +# preserved, but doing so manually may be less surprising. +# +# Note: This module requires two Bash features which you must not otherwise be +# using: the "DEBUG" trap, and the "PROMPT_COMMAND" variable. If you override +# either of these after bash-preexec has been installed it will most likely break. + +# Avoid duplicate inclusion +if [[ "${__bp_imported:-}" == "defined" ]]; then + return 0 +fi +__bp_imported="defined" + +# Should be available to each precmd and preexec +# functions, should they want it. $? and $_ are available as $? and $_, but +# $PIPESTATUS is available only in a copy, $BP_PIPESTATUS. +# TODO: Figure out how to restore PIPESTATUS before each precmd or preexec +# function. +__bp_last_ret_value="$?" +BP_PIPESTATUS=("${PIPESTATUS[@]}") +__bp_last_argument_prev_command="$_" + +__bp_inside_precmd=0 +__bp_inside_preexec=0 + +# Initial PROMPT_COMMAND string that is removed from PROMPT_COMMAND post __bp_install +__bp_install_string=$'__bp_trap_string="$(trap -p DEBUG)"\ntrap - DEBUG\n__bp_install' + +# Fails if any of the given variables are readonly +# Reference https://stackoverflow.com/a/4441178 +__bp_require_not_readonly() { + local var + for var; do + if ! ( unset "$var" 2> /dev/null ); then + echo "bash-preexec requires write access to ${var}" >&2 + return 1 + fi + done +} + +# Remove ignorespace and or replace ignoreboth from HISTCONTROL +# so we can accurately invoke preexec with a command from our +# history even if it starts with a space. +__bp_adjust_histcontrol() { + local histcontrol + histcontrol="${HISTCONTROL//ignorespace}" + # Replace ignoreboth with ignoredups + if [[ "$histcontrol" == *"ignoreboth"* ]]; then + histcontrol="ignoredups:${histcontrol//ignoreboth}" + fi; + export HISTCONTROL="$histcontrol" +} + +# This variable describes whether we are currently in "interactive mode"; +# i.e. whether this shell has just executed a prompt and is waiting for user +# input. It documents whether the current command invoked by the trace hook is +# run interactively by the user; it's set immediately after the prompt hook, +# and unset as soon as the trace hook is run. +__bp_preexec_interactive_mode="" + +__bp_trim_whitespace() { + local var=$@ + var="${var#"${var%%[![:space:]]*}"}" # remove leading whitespace characters + var="${var%"${var##*[![:space:]]}"}" # remove trailing whitespace characters + echo -n "$var" +} + + +# Returns a copy of the passed in string trimmed of whitespace +# and removes any leading or trailing semi colons. +# Used for manipulating substrings in PROMPT_COMMAND +__bp_sanitize_string() { + local sanitized_string + sanitized_string=$(__bp_trim_whitespace "${1:-}") + sanitized_string=${sanitized_string%;} + sanitized_string=${sanitized_string#;} + sanitized_string=$(__bp_trim_whitespace "$sanitized_string") + echo -n "$sanitized_string" +} + +# This function is installed as part of the PROMPT_COMMAND; +# It sets a variable to indicate that the prompt was just displayed, +# to allow the DEBUG trap to know that the next command is likely interactive. +__bp_interactive_mode() { + __bp_preexec_interactive_mode="on"; +} + + +# This function is installed as part of the PROMPT_COMMAND. +# It will invoke any functions defined in the precmd_functions array. +__bp_precmd_invoke_cmd() { + # Save the returned value from our last command, and from each process in + # its pipeline. Note: this MUST be the first thing done in this function. + __bp_last_ret_value="$?" BP_PIPESTATUS=("${PIPESTATUS[@]}") + + # Don't invoke precmds if we are inside an execution of an "original + # prompt command" by another precmd execution loop. This avoids infinite + # recursion. + if (( __bp_inside_precmd > 0 )); then + return + fi + local __bp_inside_precmd=1 + + # Invoke every function defined in our function array. + local precmd_function + for precmd_function in "${precmd_functions[@]}"; do + + # Only execute this function if it actually exists. + # Test existence of functions with: declare -[Ff] + if type -t "$precmd_function" 1>/dev/null; then + __bp_set_ret_value "$__bp_last_ret_value" "$__bp_last_argument_prev_command" + # Quote our function invocation to prevent issues with IFS + "$precmd_function" + fi + done +} + +# Sets a return value in $?. We may want to get access to the $? variable in our +# precmd functions. This is available for instance in zsh. We can simulate it in bash +# by setting the value here. +__bp_set_ret_value() { + return ${1:-} +} + +__bp_in_prompt_command() { + + local prompt_command_array + IFS=$'\n;' read -rd '' -a prompt_command_array <<< "$PROMPT_COMMAND" + + local trimmed_arg + trimmed_arg=$(__bp_trim_whitespace "${1:-}") + + local command + for command in "${prompt_command_array[@]:-}"; do + local trimmed_command + trimmed_command=$(__bp_trim_whitespace "$command") + # Only execute each function if it actually exists. + if [[ "$trimmed_command" == "$trimmed_arg" ]]; then + return 0 + fi + done + + return 1 +} + +# This function is installed as the DEBUG trap. It is invoked before each +# interactive prompt display. Its purpose is to inspect the current +# environment to attempt to detect if the current command is being invoked +# interactively, and invoke 'preexec' if so. +__bp_preexec_invoke_exec() { + + # Save the contents of $_ so that it can be restored later on. + # https://stackoverflow.com/questions/40944532/bash-preserve-in-a-debug-trap#40944702 + __bp_last_argument_prev_command="${1:-}" + # Don't invoke preexecs if we are inside of another preexec. + if (( __bp_inside_preexec > 0 )); then + return + fi + local __bp_inside_preexec=1 + + # Checks if the file descriptor is not standard out (i.e. '1') + # __bp_delay_install checks if we're in test. Needed for bats to run. + # Prevents preexec from being invoked for functions in PS1 + if [[ ! -t 1 && -z "${__bp_delay_install:-}" ]]; then + return + fi + + if [[ -n "${COMP_LINE:-}" ]]; then + # We're in the middle of a completer. This obviously can't be + # an interactively issued command. + return + fi + if [[ -z "${__bp_preexec_interactive_mode:-}" ]]; then + # We're doing something related to displaying the prompt. Let the + # prompt set the title instead of me. + return + else + # If we're in a subshell, then the prompt won't be re-displayed to put + # us back into interactive mode, so let's not set the variable back. + # In other words, if you have a subshell like + # (sleep 1; sleep 2) + # You want to see the 'sleep 2' as a set_command_title as well. + if [[ 0 -eq "${BASH_SUBSHELL:-}" ]]; then + __bp_preexec_interactive_mode="" + fi + fi + + if __bp_in_prompt_command "${BASH_COMMAND:-}"; then + # If we're executing something inside our prompt_command then we don't + # want to call preexec. Bash prior to 3.1 can't detect this at all :/ + __bp_preexec_interactive_mode="" + return + fi + + local this_command + this_command=$( + export LC_ALL=C + HISTTIMEFORMAT= builtin history 1 | sed '1 s/^ *[0-9][0-9]*[* ] //' + ) + + # Sanity check to make sure we have something to invoke our function with. + if [[ -z "$this_command" ]]; then + return + fi + + # If none of the previous checks have returned out of this function, then + # the command is in fact interactive and we should invoke the user's + # preexec functions. + + # Invoke every function defined in our function array. + local preexec_function + local preexec_function_ret_value + local preexec_ret_value=0 + for preexec_function in "${preexec_functions[@]:-}"; do + + # Only execute each function if it actually exists. + # Test existence of function with: declare -[fF] + if type -t "$preexec_function" 1>/dev/null; then + __bp_set_ret_value ${__bp_last_ret_value:-} + # Quote our function invocation to prevent issues with IFS + "$preexec_function" "$this_command" + preexec_function_ret_value="$?" + if [[ "$preexec_function_ret_value" != 0 ]]; then + preexec_ret_value="$preexec_function_ret_value" + fi + fi + done + + # Restore the last argument of the last executed command, and set the return + # value of the DEBUG trap to be the return code of the last preexec function + # to return an error. + # If `extdebug` is enabled a non-zero return value from any preexec function + # will cause the user's command not to execute. + # Run `shopt -s extdebug` to enable + __bp_set_ret_value "$preexec_ret_value" "$__bp_last_argument_prev_command" +} + +__bp_install() { + # Exit if we already have this installed. + if [[ "${PROMPT_COMMAND:-}" == *"__bp_precmd_invoke_cmd"* ]]; then + return 1; + fi + + trap '__bp_preexec_invoke_exec "$_"' DEBUG + + # Preserve any prior DEBUG trap as a preexec function + local prior_trap=$(sed "s/[^']*'\(.*\)'[^']*/\1/" <<<"${__bp_trap_string:-}") + unset __bp_trap_string + if [[ -n "$prior_trap" ]]; then + eval '__bp_original_debug_trap() { + '"$prior_trap"' + }' + preexec_functions+=(__bp_original_debug_trap) + fi + + # Adjust our HISTCONTROL Variable if needed. + __bp_adjust_histcontrol + + # Issue #25. Setting debug trap for subshells causes sessions to exit for + # backgrounded subshell commands (e.g. (pwd)& ). Believe this is a bug in Bash. + # + # Disabling this by default. It can be enabled by setting this variable. + if [[ -n "${__bp_enable_subshells:-}" ]]; then + + # Set so debug trap will work be invoked in subshells. + set -o functrace > /dev/null 2>&1 + shopt -s extdebug > /dev/null 2>&1 + fi; + + local __bp_existing_prompt_command + # Remove setting our trap install string and sanitize the existing prompt command string + __bp_existing_prompt_command="${PROMPT_COMMAND//$__bp_install_string[;$'\n']}" # Edge case of appending to PROMPT_COMMAND + __bp_existing_prompt_command="${__bp_existing_prompt_command//$__bp_install_string}" + __bp_existing_prompt_command=$(__bp_sanitize_string "$__bp_existing_prompt_command") + + # Install our hooks in PROMPT_COMMAND to allow our trap to know when we've + # actually entered something. + PROMPT_COMMAND=$'__bp_precmd_invoke_cmd\n' + if [[ -n "$__bp_existing_prompt_command" ]]; then + PROMPT_COMMAND+=${__bp_existing_prompt_command}$'\n' + fi; + PROMPT_COMMAND+='__bp_interactive_mode' + + # Add two functions to our arrays for convenience + # of definition. + precmd_functions+=(precmd) + preexec_functions+=(preexec) + + # Invoke our two functions manually that were added to $PROMPT_COMMAND + __bp_precmd_invoke_cmd + __bp_interactive_mode +} + +# Sets an installation string as part of our PROMPT_COMMAND to install +# after our session has started. This allows bash-preexec to be included +# at any point in our bash profile. +__bp_install_after_session_init() { + + # Make sure this is bash that's running this and return otherwise. + if [[ -z "${BASH_VERSION:-}" ]]; then + return 1; + fi + + # bash-preexec needs to modify these variables in order to work correctly + # if it can't, just stop the installation + __bp_require_not_readonly PROMPT_COMMAND HISTCONTROL HISTTIMEFORMAT || return + + local sanitized_prompt_command + sanitized_prompt_command=$(__bp_sanitize_string "$PROMPT_COMMAND") + if [[ -n "$sanitized_prompt_command" ]]; then + PROMPT_COMMAND=${sanitized_prompt_command}$'\n' + fi; + PROMPT_COMMAND+=${__bp_install_string} +} + +# Run our install so long as we're not delaying it. +if [[ -z "${__bp_delay_install:-}" ]]; then + __bp_install_after_session_init +fi; +# -- END BASH-PREEXEC.SH -- + +} +_install_bash_preexec +unset -f _install_bash_preexec + +# -- BEGIN ITERM2 CUSTOMIZATIONS -- + +# We don't care about whitespace, but users care about not changing their histcontrol variables. +# We overwrite the upstream __bp_adjust_histcontrol function whcih gets called from the next +# PROMPT_COMMAND invocation. +function __bp_adjust_histcontrol() { + true +} + +function iterm2_begin_osc { + printf "\033]" +} + +function iterm2_end_osc { + printf "\007" +} + +function iterm2_print_state_data() { + local _iterm2_hostname="${iterm2_hostname}" + if [ -z "${iterm2_hostname:-}" ]; then + _iterm2_hostname=$(hostname -f 2>/dev/null) + fi + iterm2_begin_osc + printf "1337;RemoteHost=%s@%s" "$USER" "$_iterm2_hostname" + iterm2_end_osc + + iterm2_begin_osc + printf "1337;CurrentDir=%s" "$PWD" + iterm2_end_osc + + iterm2_print_user_vars +} + +# Usage: iterm2_set_user_var key value +function iterm2_set_user_var() { + iterm2_begin_osc + printf "1337;SetUserVar=%s=%s" "$1" $(printf "%s" "$2" | base64 | tr -d '\n') + iterm2_end_osc +} + +if [ -z "$(type -t iterm2_print_user_vars)" ] || [ "$(type -t iterm2_print_user_vars)" != function ]; then + # iterm2_print_user_vars is not already defined. Provide a no-op default version. + # + # Users can write their own version of this function. It should call + # iterm2_set_user_var but not produce any other output. + function iterm2_print_user_vars() { + true + } +fi + +function iterm2_prompt_prefix() { + iterm2_begin_osc + printf "133;D;\$?" + iterm2_end_osc +} + +function iterm2_prompt_mark() { + iterm2_begin_osc + printf "133;A" + iterm2_end_osc +} + +function iterm2_prompt_suffix() { + iterm2_begin_osc + printf "133;B" + iterm2_end_osc +} + +function iterm2_print_version_number() { + iterm2_begin_osc + printf "1337;ShellIntegrationVersion=16;shell=bash" + iterm2_end_osc +} + + +# If hostname -f is slow on your system, set iterm2_hostname before sourcing this script. +# On macOS we run `hostname -f` every time because it is fast. +if [ -z "${iterm2_hostname:-}" ]; then + if [ "$(uname)" != "Darwin" ]; then + iterm2_hostname=$(hostname -f 2>/dev/null) + # some flavors of BSD (i.e. NetBSD and OpenBSD) don't have the -f option + if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then + iterm2_hostname=$(hostname) + fi + fi +fi + +# Runs after interactively edited command but before execution +__iterm2_preexec() { + # Save the returned value from our last command + __iterm2_last_ret_value="$?" + + iterm2_begin_osc + printf "133;C;" + iterm2_end_osc + # If PS1 still has the value we set it to in iterm2_preexec_invoke_cmd then + # restore it to its original value. It might have changed if you have + # another PROMPT_COMMAND (like liquidprompt) that modifies PS1. + if [ -n "${ITERM_ORIG_PS1+xxx}" -a "$PS1" = "$ITERM_PREV_PS1" ] + then + export PS1="$ITERM_ORIG_PS1" + fi + iterm2_ran_preexec="yes" + + __bp_set_ret_value "$__iterm2_last_ret_value" "$__bp_last_argument_prev_command" +} + +# Prints the current directory and hostname control sequences. Modifies PS1 to +# add the FinalTerm A and B codes to locate the prompt. +function __iterm2_prompt_command () { + __iterm2_last_ret_value="$?" + + # Work around a bug in CentOS 7.2 where preexec doesn't run if you press + # ^C while entering a command. + if [[ -z "${iterm2_ran_preexec:-}" ]] + then + __iterm2_preexec "" + fi + iterm2_ran_preexec="" + + # This is an iTerm2 addition to try to work around a problem in the + # original preexec.bash. + # When the PS1 has command substitutions, this gets invoked for each + # substitution and each command that's run within the substitution, which + # really adds up. It would be great if we could do something like this at + # the end of this script: + # PS1="$(iterm2_prompt_prefix)$PS1($iterm2_prompt_suffix)" + # and have iterm2_prompt_prefix set a global variable that tells precmd not to + # output anything and have iterm2_prompt_suffix reset that variable. + # Unfortunately, command substitutions run in subshells and can't + # communicate to the outside world. + # Instead, we have this workaround. We save the original value of PS1 in + # $ITERM_ORIG_PS1. Then each time this function is run (it's called from + # PROMPT_COMMAND just before the prompt is shown) it will change PS1 to a + # string without any command substitutions by doing eval on ITERM_ORIG_PS1. At + # this point ITERM_PREEXEC_INTERACTIVE_MODE is still the empty string, so preexec + # won't produce output for command substitutions. + + # The first time this is called ITERM_ORIG_PS1 is unset. This tests if the variable + # is undefined (not just empty) and initializes it. We can't initialize this at the + # top of the script because it breaks with liquidprompt. liquidprompt wants to + # set PS1 from a PROMPT_COMMAND that runs just before us. Setting ITERM_ORIG_PS1 + # at the top of the script will overwrite liquidprompt's PS1, whose value would + # never make it into ITERM_ORIG_PS1. Issue 4532. It's important to check + # if it's undefined before checking if it's empty because some users have + # bash set to error out on referencing an undefined variable. + if [ -z "${ITERM_ORIG_PS1+xxx}" ] + then + # ITERM_ORIG_PS1 always holds the last user-set value of PS1. + # You only get here on the first time iterm2_preexec_invoke_cmd is called. + export ITERM_ORIG_PS1="$PS1" + fi + + # If you want to generate PS1 dynamically from PROMPT_COMMAND, the best way + # to do it is to define a function named iterm2_generate_ps1 that sets PS1. + # Issue 5964. Other shells don't have this issue because they don't need + # such extremes to get precmd and preexec. + if [ -n "$(type -t iterm2_generate_ps1)" ] && [ "$(type -t iterm2_generate_ps1)" = function ]; then + iterm2_generate_ps1 + fi + + + if [[ "$PS1" != "$ITERM_PREV_PS1" ]] + then + export ITERM_ORIG_PS1="$PS1" + fi + + # Get the value of the prompt prefix, which will change $? + \local iterm2_prompt_prefix_value="$(iterm2_prompt_prefix)" + + # Add the mark unless the prompt includes '$(iterm2_prompt_mark)' as a substring. + if [[ $ITERM_ORIG_PS1 != *'$(iterm2_prompt_mark)'* && x$ITERM2_SQUELCH_MARK = x ]] + then + iterm2_prompt_prefix_value="$iterm2_prompt_prefix_value$(iterm2_prompt_mark)" + fi + + # Send escape sequences with current directory and hostname. + iterm2_print_state_data + + # Reset $? to its saved value, which might be used in $ITERM_ORIG_PS1. + __bp_set_ret_value "$__iterm2_last_ret_value" "$__bp_last_argument_prev_command" + + # Set PS1 to various escape sequences, the user's preferred prompt, and more escape sequences. + export PS1="\[$iterm2_prompt_prefix_value\]$ITERM_ORIG_PS1\[$(iterm2_prompt_suffix)\]" + + # Save the value we just set PS1 to so if the user changes PS1 we'll know and we can update ITERM_ORIG_PS1. + export ITERM_PREV_PS1="$PS1" + __bp_set_ret_value "$__iterm2_last_ret_value" "$__bp_last_argument_prev_command" +} + +# Install my function +preexec_functions+=(__iterm2_preexec) + +iterm2_print_state_data +iterm2_print_version_number +fi + +# -- END ITERM2 CUSTOMIZATIONS -- + diff --git a/bash/.bash_profile b/bash/.bash_profile index d1b7a97..6bda752 100644 --- a/bash/.bash_profile +++ b/bash/.bash_profile @@ -9,6 +9,7 @@ fi export TZ=GB export LANG=en_GB.UTF-8 +# Make a sensible editor choice if [ -x /usr/bin/nano ]; then export EDITOR=nano export VISUAL=nano @@ -22,6 +23,10 @@ if [ $(uname) == "Darwin" ]; then # Shhh Catlina, we don't care! export BASH_SILENCE_DEPRECATION_WARNING=1 + if [ "${TERM_PROGRAM}" == "iTerm.app" ]; then + source ~/.bash/iterm2_integration.bash + fi + # M1 specific hacks if [ $(uname -p) == "arm" ]; then # Stop golang progs having fun with Rosetta 2 (https://yaleman.org/post/2021/2021-01-01-apple-m1-terraform-and-golang/)